Influencer Ariela La Langosta's Cause of Death Revealed by Police After She Was Found Dead in Her Car
NEED TO KNOW
Influencer Ariela "La Langosta" was found dead in her car on Sunday, Aug. 17, the Westchester County Police Department said in a statement
Mejia-Polanco was known on Instagram for sharing content about fashion and modeling to her over 556,000 followers
In a previous statement to PEOPLE, Ikon New York, a Manhattan restaurant and lounge, confirmed that Mejia-Polanco was an employee at the establishment and had been 'at work' the night before her death
Police have shared new details about the death of Dominican influencer Ariela 'La Langosta.'
The content creator — whose real name was Ariela Mejia-Polanco — died as a result of gunshot wounds on Sunday, Aug. 17, the Westchester County Police Department announced in a statement shared on Facebook. She was 33.
According to police, Mejia-Polanco was found dead behind the wheel of her vehicle at about 8 a.m. on Sunday morning on the eastbound Cross County Parkway near the Broad Street exit in Mount Vernon in what appeared to be a "targeted" attack.
"Her death was not a random act," the statement continued.
Mejia-Polanco's death is currently under investigation by detectives from the General Investigations Unit, per police.
In a previous statement to PEOPLE, Ikon New York, a Manhattan restaurant and lounge, confirmed that Mejia-Polanco was an employee at the establishment and had been 'at work' the night before her death.
Following the news of Mejia-Polanco's death, rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine — with whom she maintained a public friendship — posted a tribute to the late influencer, writing in Spanish that she would be remembered as the 'queen of New York.'
'NY won't ever be the same,' the rapper added. 'I loved you.'
Several nightclubs also shared tributes to Mejia-Polanco in the days after her death was made public.
'Your joy, your humility, and the way you treated everyone with so much care always made you stand out,' wrote Ikon New York in a post on Instagram on Aug. 17. 'Thank you for giving so much love and support to our home, which also became yours. To Ariela's family, we are here for anything you need.'
Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.
In another post, the restaurant shared that it would remain closed until Thursday, Aug. 21, 'out of respect for one of our beloved team members who recently passed away.'
'She was a brilliant, humble soul with incredible energy — the kind of person who could light up any room she entered. She will be deeply missed by all of us,' the restaurant continued. 'Please take a moment to cherish and love your own loved ones. Life is precious.'
Starlets of New York, a nightclub in Queens, remembered Mejia-Polanco as "a beautiful friend, loving mother, and daughter whose smile and energy lit up every room she entered' in a post on Instagram.
'Her energy will forever be missed, but her spirit will always live on with us,' the post continued.
Read the original article on People
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Smartmatic Filing Details Ex-Fox News Host Jeanine Pirro's Desire To Boost Donald Trump In 2020 And Her Efforts To Secure Pardon For Ex-Husband
A new batch of text messages and emails have emerged in newly unredacted filings in Smartmatic's defamation lawsuit against Fox, including ones showing then-network host Jeanine Pirro's desire to boost Donald Trump's prospects in the 2020 presidential election. Smartmatic is suing Fox for its amplification of claims that it was involved in rigging the 2020 presidential election. In its challenge to the lawsuit, Fox is contending that it was merely covering an issue of national importance, while blasting the election systems company's claim of $2.7 billion in damages. More from Deadline 'The Daily Show's Desi Lydic Talks Emmys Milestone, Trump-Epstein Saga, AI & Navigating Late-Night's Uncertain Future - Comedy Means Business Podcast Ari Shapiro, "All Things Considered" Host, To Depart NPR After 25 Years Roy Wood Jr. Predicts Stephen Colbert Will Become Leading Anti-Trump Voice On YouTube Next Year Read Smartmatic's filing. Read Fox's filing. In a September, 2020 text message that Pirro sent to Ronna McDaniel, who was then chair of the Republican National Committee, the Fox News host wrote, 'I work so hard for the party across the country… I'm the # 1 watched show on all news cable all weekend. I work so hard for the President and party…' Smartmatic also claimed that Pirro sought a pardon from Trump for her ex husband, Al Pirro, including by speaking to the president's son, Eric, Rudy Giuliani and Bernie Kerik. At one point, according to the Smartmatic filing, she spoke with Eric Trump because she 'was upset' when she thought the president would not grant a pardon. Per the filing, 'On January 20, 2021, Pirro texted Yanina Fleysher, Bernie Kerik's girlfriend: 'U can tell ur boyfriend he's a selfish bastard.' 'I fought for his pardon.' 'DO NOT CALL ME.' 'FUCK HIM' 'I DONT CARE ABT HIM.'' Trump did pardon Al Pirro in the hours before he left office. Earlier this month, Senate confirmed Pirro as Trump's nominee to serve as U.S. attorney for the District Of Columbia. A spokesperson for her office did not immediately return a request for comment. As it seeks a summary judgment ruling from New York Judge David Cohen, Smartmatic sought to show how Pirro, Maria Bartiromo and Lou Dobbs in particular featured guests who pushed out claims that the election was stolen and that the company was part of the deception. Per the Smartmatic filing, Pirro was incensed when Fox News decided not to air her show on Nov. 7, 2020, the day that networks declared that Biden had won the race. David Clark, who was an executive in charge of weekend programming, wrote to another Fox executive, Meade Cooper, 'Bottom line – I don't trust her to be responsible tomorrow. Her guests are all going to say the election is being stolen and if she pushes back at all it will just be a token.' 'Maybe she does not have show tomorrow night,' Cooper wrote back. 'Honestly that would be the wisest course of action,' Clark wrote. But Pirro was incensed. She wrote in a text message to Sean Hannity, 'I'M TIRED OF THE CENSORSHIP AND I'M EMBARRASSED BY HOW THEY CALLED THIS ELECTION…' 'This may be different. I'm now looking for changes. One is to leave u alone,' Hannity wrote back. Pirro did return to the air the next week, with Trump attorney Sidney Powell as a guest, making unproven claims that software from Smartmatic and Dominion was manipulated. As the stolen election claims were amplified on air, Smartmatic said that it alerted Fox executives to the falsity of the allegations made on air, while executives themselves thought that figures like Rudy Giuliani and Powell were making outlandish and false claims. Smartmatic's filing noted that Jesse Watters, now a top primetime host, wrote to friends and colleagues about Powell that she had 'lost it.' Watters referred to a Nov. 19, 2020 press conference that featured Powell and Giuliani, writing, 'Fox can't even touch that. She's radioactive now.' Pirro's show eventually was ended in 2022, when she became a regular on The Five, the top rated show on cable news. The unredacted filings also showed the extent to which Pirro and Hannity were in Trump's orbit. Per the Smartmatic filing, in a text message to Fleysher on Oct. 27, a week before the election, Pirro called Hannity an 'egomaniac.' 'I was in the Oval with Hariri talking to POTUS. He storms in like he owns the place, throws his papers on the Pres desk and says, you don't mind if I use your private bathroom, and walks into bathroom within Oval and uses it. Looks at me and says, I got to talk to him. Ie, you go. It's all abt him, period. No one else matters.' Still, Smartmatic noted, Pirro in her deposition testimony was asked if she believes that Biden 'was legitimately elected President of the United States in the 2020 election.' 'I do,' she answered. Trump has continued to make claims that the election was rigged. The Washington Post first reported on the unredacted filings. Pirro, Bartiromo and Dobbs' estate are named as defendants in the lawsuit, along with Fox. Powell also was named. Pirro, Bartiromo and Dobbs were the most prominent personalities at the network to feature the election rigging claims on their shows. Per the Smartmatic filing, on Nov. 17, 2020, Bartiromo sent a Signal message to Powell, 'Sidney we must keep you out there. Dobbs is considered very opinionated. I am news. How about Friday? I'm off all next week.' She later wrote to Powell, 'I am very worried. Please please please overturn this. Bring the evidence. I know you can. Talk Thursday won't keep bugging you. I know you are drowning in info.' She also texted to Michael Flynn, a Trump ally who had served as his national security adviser: 'I'm so worried. I will get these people on. I'm not sure I can do any more ghosn [sic] I'm doing. I am fighting hard.' Smartmatic's lawsuit makes some of the same general claims that another voting company, Dominion, made in its lawsuit against the network — that as Fox saw ratings fall in the immediate aftermath of the vote, it sought to lean into stolen election claims. In emails and texts, hosts and executives worried about a viewership backlash after Fox was the first network to call Arizona for Joe Biden on election night, the first signal that Trump would lose the race. A Fox News spokesperson said, 'The evidence shows that Smartmatic's business and reputation were badly suffering long before any claims by President Trump's lawyers on Fox News and that Smartmatic grossly inflated its damage claims to generate headlines and chill free speech. Now, in the aftermath of Smartmatic's executives getting indicted for bribery charges, we are eager and ready to continue defending our press freedoms.' In 2023, Fox settled the Dominion lawsuit for $787.5 million, but in its own filings, its attorneys say that Smartmatic's case is different. Fox's legal team has deemed Smartmatic's $2.7 billion damages claim 'pure fiction.' 'While Smartmatic claims scores of lost contract opportunities, there is no evidence that Fox News's coverage caused a single former, existing, or potential customer to refuse to do business with Smartmatic,' Fox attorneys wrote in their filing. 'Many of Smartmatic's claimed 'opportunities' are not even real.' Fox contends that Smartmatic's reputation already was harmed by 2020, noting that its president and co-founder and other executives were 'under federal criminal investigation for international bribery and money laundering in connection with obtaining one of its largest customer contracts in the Philippines. Facing imminent financial collapse and indictment, Smartmatic saw a litigation lottery ticket in Fox News's coverage of the 2020 Election.' The bribery allegations are a reference to Roger Alejandro Piñate Martinez and two other officials at the company who face federal corruption charges in Florida. More recently, Fox has sought public records that related to the process by which Smartmatic was awarded its Los Angeles County contract in 2020, including efforts to woo Los Angeles Registrar-Recorder Dean Logan. They cited allegations by federal prosecutors that Smartmatic executives funneled government contract money into a 'slush fund' to bribe officials, although the DOJ filing does not make a claim about recipients of that money. A Smartmatic spokesperson said on Wednesday, 'The allegations in the DOJ's filing are full of misrepresentations. For example, there are no 'slush funds'—only healthy contingency funds to ensure massive deployments run smoothly. The alleged 2019 bribe in Venezuela is also untethered from reality. Smartmatic ceased all operations in Venezuela in August 2017 after blowing the whistle on the government, and has never sought business there again. The timing of these allegations seems highly suspect, especially when paired with Fox's aggressive effort to amplify them.' Fox's attorneys also contend that its coverage was well within the realm of the public interest. 'Some Fox News and Fox Business reporters and commentators—including on its highest-rated shows— were skeptical of the President's challenges,' its legal team wrote. 'Others believed they had merit. But all accurately reported the President's claims while also providing their opinions on a fast-moving and evolving issue of national importance. None had any motive or desire to harm Smartmatic.' Fox attorneys also wrote that Smartmatic has fallen short of proving a key ingredient of defamation claims against a public figure: actual malice. The networks' personalities 'did not know whether the allegations were true, but they did know that the President's attorneys were filing court cases and claiming to have evidence to support them. That is not the stuff of actual malice, and a contrary ruling would be a massive blow to the First Amendment and New York law.' Best of Deadline Everything We Know About 'Emily In Paris' Season 5 So Far 'The Morning Show' Season 4: Everything We Know So Far 2025 TV Series Renewals: Photo Gallery


CNN
2 hours ago
- CNN
French streamer dies live online after months of apparent abuse
French police are investigating the death of a popular streamer, who died during a nearly 12-day live stream after apparently suffering abusive and humiliating treatment. Raphaël Graven, 46, known online as Jean Pormanove or JP, is one of the biggest streamers in France on the platform Kick and died on Monday. The 46-year-old military veteran had built a following numbering more than a million across different platforms streaming himself playing video games and had often appeared in extreme challenges. He had been collaborating since 2023 with several other streamers, principally Owen Cenazandotti, known as Naruto online, and Safine Hamadi, both of whom took part in his final livestream. Cenazandotti announced his death Monday on Instagram. In the video livestream that appeared to show his death, after he stopped moving, viewers donated money to send messages alerting the sleeping streamers to Pormanove's condition. The Nice prosecutor's office told CNN that an investigation has been opened into his death and an autopsy ordered. So far, authorities have not announced any charges related to Pormanove's death. In dozens of videos from past livestreams reviewed by CNN, Pormanove appears to be the target of jokes, bullying, physical attacks and degrading stunts. Videos from their joint livestreams show Pormanove's fellow streamers competing to see how long they could throttle him, others show him being shot with paintballs or doused with water. Thanks to donations from subscribers, the group earned money from the livestreams. In Pormanove's final livestream, a counter at the top of the screen suggested the group had earned some 36,000 euros ($42,000) from the days-long stream. During Pormanove's final livestream, which appeared to run to nearly 300 hours, participants were woken up by the revving of a motorbike in their shared bedroom, or a leafblower. At one point, Pormanove appears to be woken up when a bucket of water is thrown over him. In an interview with CNN affiliate BFMTV, Yassin Sadouni, a lawyer for Cenazandotti, said Pormanove suffered from cardiovascular problems. In one video, Pormanove talked of having to take medication. In another, Cenazandotti purports to read out messages Pormanove sent to his mother in which he complains of being 'held prisoner' by his co-streamers. The game 'is going too far,' Cenazandotti said his message read, during Pormanove's last livestream. 'I feel like I'm being held prisoner by their sh***y concept,' Cenazandotti said Pormanove wrote. It's not clear who precisely Pormanove was referring to and in a later clip he tells Cenazandotti, 'you know what I'm like when I'm angry' in reference to the messages. In another clip, his mother berates Pormanove over the phone for letting the co-streamers shave off parts of his hair. 'Are you proud of your hair? Did you see what he did to you?' she said, 'They are treating you like s***.' Sadouni, Cenazandotti's lawyer, told BFMTV that Pormanove's mother participated in staged stunts with the streamers. A common theme in discussions with his co-streamers was Pormanove's wish to marry and have children, a hope that often drew apparently mockery from the streamers. In a video from 2024, Pormanove was asked how he hoped to be remembered when he died. 'No wife, no kids. But what a nice guy!' Pormanove said, 'Me, what's on my mind now, it's to leave a mark.' Sadouni said Cenazandotti – known by his streamer handle Naruto – had nothing to do with Pormanove's death and said that the incidents targeting Pormanove were all staged. 'My client is ready to be heard and to provide all useful information,' he told CNN affiliate BFMTV Tuesday. Cenazandotti has also filed a complaint with authorities that he is being harassed online since Pormanove's death, according to Sadouni. CNN has reached out to Pormanove's mother and Hamadi for comment. Cenazandotti and Hamadi were briefly detained as part of a police investigation into the humiliation of vulnerable people in January 2025, according to CNN affiliate BFMTV. According to the Nice prosecutor, they denied committing any crime and have not been charged with any crime. 'The death of Jean Pormanove and the violence he endured are an absolute horror,' French Secretary of State for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Affairs Clara Chappaz said in a post on X Tuesday. 'Jean Pormanove was humiliated and mistreated for months live on the Kick platform,' she added. Kick, the streaming platform the streamers used, said that all those involved in the broadcast had been banned 'pending the ongoing investigation,' which the site will cooperate with, per a statement to CNN Wednesday.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Deportation of 6-Year-Old Puts Spotlight on ICE's Detention of Families
On a morning last week, a mother from Ecuador nervously entered a federal building in Lower Manhattan with her 6-year-old daughter and 19-year-old son for a mandatory appointment with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency. Inside, ICE agents detained the mother, Martha, and the two children. Officers drove the teenage son to a detention center across the river in New Jersey and flew the mother and her daughter to a family detention center in Texas. On Tuesday, exactly a week later, Martha and her daughter boarded a plane and were deported to Ecuador, leaving behind two other children in New York who had not been detained. The detention of the family, especially the 6-year-old girl, touched a nerve among New York elected officials like few other ICE arrests have during President Trump's second term. Their arrest ignited a scramble to try to stop their deportation, and prompted a rare rebuke from Gov. Kathy Hochul, who called the arrest 'cruel and unjust.' The family's case illuminated a practice the Trump administration has revived across the country: the detention and deportation of families with children. But while the case was the first deportation of a parent and child to receive news coverage in New York, they were hardly the first family to be deported this year. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.